Archive for May, 2009

mJob Partners with Bayard

Monday, May 18th, 2009

mJob has partnered with Bayard Advertising, a full-service recruitment communications company.

Bayard Advertising partners with employers to save time and money by developing interactive strategies, employer brand campaigns, weekly ad creation and placement and Web site design.

The new partnership will allow Bayard’s clients the option of including a mobile initiative powered by mJob to enhance their current sourcing and candidate management campaigns.

“Our alliance with mJob gives us a competitive advantage to offer the best mobile marketing solutions available,” Eric Holwell, director of of Interactive Services at Bayard Advertising, said. “In addition to standard text messaging campaigns, mJob expands our scope of services to include bluecasting, scan marketing and WAP site development which can host our clients’ jobs in a readable format designed for mobile handsets. Targeted SEO and SEM strategies are available as well which will assist in taking advantage of the 20 million people who search on a mobile handset.”

“Bayard is a well-respected, long-standing company in this industry, and mJob is proud to be delivering solutions in tandem with their current array of services,” mJob Founder Joel Cheesman said. “This partnership ensures that Bayard’s clients can take advantage of the latest mobile technologies to ensure an effective, efficient mobile strategy.”

The most recent research indicates that mobile is the most pervasive technology. There are more than 4 billion handsets connecting users throughout the world, making mobile always within reach, unlike land lines and computers that aren’t as compact and versatile.

A recent study by the CDC shows that for the first time, cell phones outnumber fixed lines as a household’s unique phone. The study found one in five homes have a cell phone but no land line.

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The Slice

Sunday, May 17th, 2009

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Phones Better than Netbooks

Friday, May 15th, 2009

Phones will have more success than netbooks, at least if Jim Balsillie has anything to say about it.

Balsillie, CEO of Research in Motion – which produces the BlackBerry, said he plans to focus on the company’s core business in phones. Balsillie’s statement comes as some computer makers are starting to produce phones and phone companies, such as Nokia, are looking into netbooks.

“Form factor is a personal preference but it’s got to be something that lasts the better part of the day and you can hold up to your ear and clip onto your belt,” he told Reuters. “Those are a very tight systems constraints for a netbook.”

In essence, Balsillie is focused on developing new versions of the BlackBerry phone. He said if a phone’s dimensions seem too cramped, they can be suplemented with peripherals and Bluetooth.

Bob Stutz, an executive from SAP, a business supplier that delivers business applications to BlackBerry devices, shares Balsillie’s thoughts.

“We’ve been down this route with these kinds of devices,” he said, referring to “iPaqs, fliptop notebooks and other specialist devices. Why we are doing this with RIM today is because these (other) devices don’t work.

“Customers really have been down the gamut,” Stutz added. “They’ve been down this path. At the end of the day what we’ve really found is that if they can do it on a BlackBerry that’s what they’ll want.”

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Desktop and Mobile Searches Meet

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

On Tuesday, Google hosted a Searchology event, during which time the company revealed a number of core search upgrades, including some dealing with mobile.

Engineering Director Scott Huffman showed how Google searchers will soon be able to automatically synch their desktop and mobile searches.

“Mobile search is growing faster than search on PCs, and it’s the primary way that people access search in some countries,” he said. “But we want [it] to become a daily engagement activity no matter where you are.”

For instance, if someone is searching for upcoming flight information on a desktop, they could have the flight’s status translate to their phone, getting rid of any need to enter the data again. Huffman said this would stop people from having to “frantically look through their baggage for the sheet of paper with the flight number on it.”

In order for this type of function to work, people would need to be logged into a Google account. Google also recently upgraded its mobile image search, which has been optimized for touch-screen phones, and launched a location-aware astronomy app for the Android mobile operating system.

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Google Finds New Mobile Search Patterns

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Google has released the findings of a study that show new mobile search patterns for Apple’s iPhone and smartphones using Google’s Android.

The new search patterns could signal a change in advertising and behavioral targeting for mobile search, according to an article by MediaPost. The results found that iPhone users search in much the same way as computer users.

The study was completed by Maryam Kamvar and Melanie Kellar of Google and Ya Xu from the Department of Statistics at Stanford University. The three created a metric for quantifying the variability of a user’s search intentions throughout time. The variability metric, or entro-percent, is a “normalized entropy metric” that compares the number of search tasks issued by a user with the number of categories those search tasks fall under.

The group used data in the research from anonymous logs that don’t contain personally identifiable information. The sample from approximately 10,000 users of each platform was selected by a random subset of browser cookies that fell into a specific numeric range.

“Our logs analysis is done on an aggregate-level, which means we’re never looking at sequences of searches made by one user,” Kamvar said.

Of all the study’s findings, the most surprising was that many trends indicate that searches on high-end phones are becoming more like computer-based searches. This includes query length, diversity and repeat search behavior.

“These trends on the high-end phones indicate to us that mobile search is starting to really ‘work,’” Kamvar continued. “In other words, mobile search is a viable means for users to find information.”

The study further found that the average number of words per iPhone query was about the same as those in computer queries. An iPhone query consists of an average of 2.93 words and 18.25 characters. Queries from conventional phones consist of an average of 2.44 words and 15.89 characters, an increase from the previous reported average of 2.35 words.

This information should help Google better serve mobile customers. The research not only indicates that there is no one search interface suitable for all mobile phones, but also suggests that high-end phones that integrate with standard computer-based functions that personalize features would be beneficial to the user.

“(The) study shows that properly targeted mobile ads would enormously benefit the advertiser and the mobile user,” Kamvar added. “This is because we find mobile users on the non-high-end devices who query a topic seem to be ‘loyalists’ to a particular topic.”

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AIRS Talks Up mJob

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

AIRS has posted an article on Going Mobile that highlights the effectiveness of mobile job searching and the potential of mJob:

For those keeping score, the discussion Zollman referenced at the Onrec conference has since taken place, and the result is a new destination, mobile. And, right now, the way to get there is via mJob.

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GoMoNews Chimes-In on mJob

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Popular mobile marketing blog GoMoNews has chimed in on our latest creation with Zumeo:

This isn’t the first time we’ve seen a mobile Internet job hunting service … However, this is certainly the first time I’ve seen job search so geared towards mobile Web.

Muchos gracias!

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Nokia Brands its Cell phones

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Finland-based Nokia, the world’s biggest cellphone maker, is creating mobile devices wrapped in corporate logos.

The company is offering advertisers the right to brand mobile handsets for an undisclosed fee. According to an article by Advertising Age, advertisers can choose a Nokia phone that complements their demographic target, put the logo on the handset and accessories, embed mobile content into the phone and put it in packaging that also features their logo. The program should launch in the United States during the second half of this year.

Benefits to the company include Nokia’s ability to pre-load content on the advertisers behalf, while the benefit to consumers is being able to access that original content. David Kohl, Nokia Interactive head of sales-Americas, said this allows brands the opportunity to put content in the hands of the most potent advocates, those who like the brand and want to be seen with it.

The program has been running for about 18 months and seen some initial success in Brazil. When it arrives in the United States, the program will test how far consumers are willing to go to interact with brands.

The branded phones cost between $70 and $200 in Brazil and are sold through retailers that market them with in-store promotions and co-op advertising programs involving Nokia.

One of the program’s best-selling phones is under Unilever’s Seda personal care brand, which used a limited-edition pink Nokia phone to refresh its brand and launch a teen shampoo line. The device, which costs $100, came bundled with games, trial-size shampoos and exclusive music. The phone sold out within two months, and sold 200,000 units between April and December.

However, some critics of the program worry that Brazil’s mobile economics apply more to the program than that of the United States. For instance, customers in Brazil pay more for mobile Internet access and content, with songs costing about $3 a piece, but stateside content is inexpensive or free.

Also, Brazilians usually prepay for mobile phone time, meaning they can buy handsets without carrier oversight. However, in the United States, people usually buy phones through carriers who then subsidize the handsets in exchange for signing a service contract.

Companies such as Disney and ESPN have already failed at attempts to sell branded handsets. But Nokia said it’s currently in talks with T-Mobile and AT&T regarding distribution of the branded phones.

Most experts say the success of the program will depend on what consumers are able to gain from carrying a branded phone. Although the phones will cost the same or less than the unbranded version, most consumers will expect some form of compensation for being a sort of brand spokesperson.

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Google Tops Mobile Searches

Monday, May 11th, 2009

Most people know that Google is the preferred search engine. But did you know that Google also is topping the charts when it comes to mobile phone searches?

When it comes to traditional search, Google dominates the market, with 63.7 percent of all searches conducted in the United States, compared to Yahoo‘s 20 percent. However, those numbers don’t take into account mobile Internet devices. A new report from Net Applications, an Internet marketing firm, found that Google accounts for 97.5 percent of all mobile phone searches.

On top of that, BusinessWeek recently reported that Dell is looking into the option of using Google’s Android operating system for a new line of inexpensive laptops. Dell would be the second major computer manufacturer to talk about abandoning Windows for Android, following the lead of Hewlett-Packard.

There also have been reports that Google could buy Twitter for a few hundred million dollars. Apple also has offered to buy Twitter for $700 million. But Twitter Co-Founder Biz Stone has said he won’t sell the company. However, a new way of searching tweets could be more Google-friendly.

Santosh Jayaram, vice president of operations at Twitter and former head of search quality at Google, recently revealed that now Twitter’s search engine will scan each tweet, find embedded links, scan the linked page and index the content to produce more accurate results. Twitter’s search engine also will rank results according to the hottest Internet or cultural trend of the moment, as well as the popularity of each twitterer.

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Mobile Past, Present & Future

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

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